All that fine print that you and I and everyone else who’s not studying to be a lawyer skips over when installing software is called the EULA—end user license agreement. The one for Apple’s iTunes software (warning—it’s a PDF and it’s reaaaallly long) may very well contain some useful information.

If you’ve ever found yourself waiting for a bus or subway train, wondering why it hasn’t arrived at its exact scheduled time, I think I saw you dejectedly pacing around at the bus stop near my place this morning. Get with it, man! It’s the bus! And it was, like, 7:00 in the morning. That’s primetime, buddy.

For months, you’ve been trying to help those Angry Birds protect their eggs from the mysteriously green pigs, and now you’ll finally get to find out why they wanted those eggs in the first place with the Angry Birds Cookbook.

At WWDC today, Apple unveiled its long-awaited iMessage – a real-time instant messaging service that’s essentially its version of BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) – to polite clapping. Great news for iOS fans; bad news for RIM, which is probably the biggest understatement ever, today.

Interesting. See that thing up there? That’s Roku. It’s a nice, inexpensive, internet-connected box that you hook up to your TV. Once it’s set up, you can use it to stream movies and TV shows from the likes of Hulu Plus, Netflix, and Amazon, plus music and photos from Pandora and Flickr, respectively.

Apple’s iWork suite is now available on iPhones and iPod Touches, and it’s free for users who already have the iPad versions.

iWork consists of three programs: Pages for written documents, Numbers for spreadsheets and Keynote for presentations. Each app costs $10. There’s no discount for buying them all at once, but as universal iOS …